“You shouldn’t have to run and sprint from your car to the muni-meter, [then] run back with the receipt because you’re in fear of getting a ticket in those three or four or five minutes,” she fumed. “It’s just silly and it’s the kind of thing that drives New Yorkers crazy.”

Bloomberg spokesman Marc LaVorgna said the bill “increases the likelihood of on-street confrontations with traffic agents.”

Bloomberg is still reviewing a bill, passed yesterday, that would prohibit the city from affixing alternate-side parking stickers to cars. Quinn and bill sponsor David Greenfield (D-Brooklyn) said the violation notices are difficult to remove.

But the mayor does plan to sign a bill — introduced by Councilman James Sanders (D-Queens) — that requires 30 days to pass before the city issues late fees for parking violations.